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‘Green’ playground planned at Vaughn Elementary
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
When the Vaughn Elementary School
PTA board wanted to find a way to get a new playground
system installed for the students, Lisa (Dervaes) Mills
volunteered to chair the playground committee. Mills and
her husband, Matthew, were students at the school in the
mid-1970s, and both had great-great grandparents who
settled on the Key Peninsula. The couple’s two children
are now Vaughn students.

Parents Tina Self
and Lisa Mills (middle left to right) pose with
their children, fifth-grader Kelson Mills
(back), fourth-grader
Josie Self (front left) and third-grader
MacKenzie Mills on the
same slide they played on as kids at Vaughn
Elementary
School. The new playground will be placed in the
grassy area
seen behind the slide, near the same area where
the old school
building sat. For “old times’ sake, ”the kids
are wearing shirts
from their parents’ era when the school’s mascot
was “The
Vaughn Varmints.”
Photo courtesy Mindi La Rose |
A teacher in the Port Orchard
school system, Mills is keenly aware of the differences
in the playgrounds at Vaughn, and some of the other
schools. “We felt there was a real lack,” she says.
“We’re trying hard to get a good playground system in.
The kids sure deserve it.”
Joining Mills in this effort is PTA
board Treasurer Tina (Selfors) Self. She was also a
Vaughn Elementary student in the ’70s, a few years after
Mills. Self’s daughter is a fourth-grader at Vaughn, and
her son, a Vaughn graduate, is now in sixth grade at Key
Peninsula Middle School.
Mills and Self first set out to
discover what kind of playground the children would
choose for themselves. In May 2006, they posted big
sheets of paper at the school and encouraged students to
draw what they wanted; they talked with kids and got
teacher input. Then they shopped for a “green”
playground that was environmentally-friendly and met
state standards for wheelchair access.
“(The new system) is 100 percent
U.S. made of recycled steel and structural plastic, and
the wood chips to be used are also recycled,” Self says.
The playground area will include
benches and tables for socializing, paths, and places
for visitors of all ages to relax and enjoy the
outdoors. The anticipated price tag is between $50,000
and $60,000. As soon as the school district completes
required drainage, playground construction for Phase I
can begin.
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More information:
Inquiries about the playground
structure or fund can be sent to
vaughnptatreasurer@yahoo.com. |
So far, the committee has raised
about $28,000. Last May, they held the first Vaughn
Elementary PTA auction, their primary fundraiser. They
will hold another one this May, and hope Vaughn
Elementary parents and the entire community will
participate, turning a grand playground desire into a
delightful reality.
Self sent out a request for
donations to 2,100 businesses in the Key Peninsula/Gig
Harbor community “on Dec. 14, the day of the storm,”
with scant response. Still, she is determined to find a
way to build the entire playground system. With no grant
or matching funds, the committee is reliant upon the
goodwill and commitment of the community to help build
it. Her donation letter read, in part, “A letter of
gratitude listing everyone who donated will be sent to
the Vaughn student body. We want to make sure people
who donate are recognized for their generosity and
involvement in their community.” Additionally, for
several levels of giving (beginning at $100), a plaque
will be engraved with the donor’s name and mounted in
the general playground area.
The new playground may or may not
be fully complete before Self’s daughter leaves the
school after fifth grade. “I’ve got a two-year term (as
treasurer),” she says, “This (playground system) is
something I’m going to be involved with until it’s
completed.”
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News, all rights reserved.
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